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Current Category SWORDS > AMERICANA > Hanwei Americana > Hanwei Knives

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KH2069 CAS Outrider Bowie Knife
The Outrider is a big Bowie, combining an 11” forged 440C blade with brushed stainless fittings and a checkered rosewood grip for a beautifully proportioned cutting tool. Superior balance is achieved by deep fullering of the blade, making the knife very agile. A hard-case leather-covered scabbard and belt frog provide for secure carry, while a solid oak stand is provided for collector display
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KH2188 New Orleans Bowie
New Orleans Bowie (KH2188) This knife replicates one made in the New Orleans’s French Quarter by a cutler named Pradel. This Bowie is designed to be handy while worn in confined quarters -- say, sitting at a faro table or a poker game on a riverboat. At such a place, you might want a knife that would come to hand very quickly
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KH2189 Hunter Bowie
Hunter Bowie (KH2189) Alfred Hunter was a cutler from Newark, New Jersey. He was in the Bowie knife business early 1830’s or 1840’s. His bowies were top quality then, and very rare now. The notch on the blade is called a “Spanish notch” and is indicative of some of the early knives
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KH2210 Bell Bowie
Bell Bowie (KH2210) This is a replication of a Bowie knife made by Samuel Bell. Bell was a cutler and silversmith first in Knoxville, Tennessee, then in San Antonio, Texas. He was mayor of Knoxville, and later made some silver spurs for Sam Houston. It’s a real rib-tickler, long and lean like Tennessee, and big enough for a Texan!
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KH2215 Death to Traitors Bowie
Death To Traitors Bowie (KH2216) Many Northern troops carried Bowie knives with the “Death to Traitors” mark during Lincoln’s War, so the Southerners referred to it as “a dam-yankee knife.” Those of us who can see both sides of the question about Lincoln’s War, simply call it a “hateful knife.”
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KH2216 Vicksburg Bowie
The Vicksburg Bowie (KH2215) has a very early style blade with the Spanish notch and a handle called a “dogbone” due to its pommel shape. This is the style often carried by the keel-boatmen and on the steamboats. When you hold this one in your hand, it’ll give you the confidence to take on “a room full of wildcats”, as the old riverboat brag went
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